by Ruby Dixon
LAUREN
T’chai’s not okay. I knew he wouldn’t be, but I also didn’t know how bad it’d be. His midsection is completely torn up, and he’s unconscious and losing blood. Both Mari and the infamous R’jaal work on T’chai, sewing up his wounds and cleaning them and making him comfortable in one of the huts. To my surprise, Mari’s been extremely calm. It’s like the moment she saw how bad her mate was, something snapped in her mind and all the hysteria went away.
Whatever the reason, her calm is good, because there’s so much to be done at the beach camp. Two of the other aliens—M’tok and S’bren—are badly wounded and covered in blood. M’tok limps and S’bren is favoring one of his arms, clutched against his chest. They’re still doing their best to work, carving up the carcasses of the dead animals so they can be dragged away from the beach. They can’t stay because every scavenger known to mankind—or alienkind—is going to show up to get a free meal. Even I know that.
My K’thar pitches in to help the others immediately. Despite their differences, it’s K’thar that helps R’jaal carry the gravely wounded T’chai back to the hut. Then, he helps the two others in hacking up the creatures, even though they all look exhausted and want to do nothing more than collapse.
But they can’t. There’s no one else to do it.
The realization strikes me hard. The work never ends here on this planet, because there’s always going to be more that needs to be done. If you’re in danger, all you’ve got is your own two hands and that of your friends. It’s a sobering thought and it makes me step forward to help. When the next hacked-up hunk of creature is cut free, I head forward before the badly limping M’tok can move to take it. “I can grab this one,” I say.
“L’ren,” K’thar says, a question in his voice.
“I’m okay,” I promise him with a smile. Of course, the smile hurts because Mari busted my lip, but what’s a split lip compared to what the others have going on? I’ve got four good limbs at least. “I know where you guys are taking this. I can do this.”
He hesitates and then nods.
It’s easier said than done to help, though. There’s no handhold on dead animal flesh, so I grab it as best I can and haul it down the sand. The thing’s heavy, slippery, and unwieldy, and I end up dragging it most of the way. The huts are located at the edge of a tiny cove, and we’re dragging this stuff to the other side. If predators come by looking for a free meal, they won’t be close to the huts and the wounded. I drop off my bundle and grab more, and then it seems like the rest of the day turns into hauling chunks, over and over again.
I’ve never been so relieved when the last one is done and there’s no more to drag away. K’thar takes me to the water’s edge and we both splash ourselves clean of the worst grime, and I check his wounds. His are mostly scratches. A few gouges look nasty, but when I try to fuss over him, he reassures me with a few words and gestures that he’s all right.
We head away from the beach to check in on the others. They look just as wrecked as I’d thought, and T’chai is unconscious and burning up. Mari holds his hand tightly in hers, unmoving from his bedside. The three others in their little tribe look grim and battered.
Out of all of them, K’thar and I came out of this the luckiest. It’s also clear to me that Mari isn’t going home with us.
It’s also clear to me that if we leave these guys, they’re going to struggle. Mari and T’chai are inside one hut. R’jaal has moved out and checks on the other two men, but they all look ready to fall over exhausted. I feel the same, and I’m hungry and thirsty to boot, but it feels wrong to ask for something like that.
A wounded arm and a bad knee are one thing, and I’m sure that the guys will manage to survive. But T’chai is going to need a lot of help, and I know from my time with K’thar that there’s a lot to be done around every camp. What if they need water boiled for T’chai’s wounds? That’s a fire and water to be retrieved before it can even make it to his bedside. What about food? Drinking water? There’s so much work ahead of them that my heart hurts.
“We can’t leave,” I murmur to K’thar. I don’t know how to say it in his language, so I try again with the few words I do know. “K’thar, L’ren no go? Help?”
He studies me and caresses my face again. “Go back Z’hren, J’shel, N’dek.”
I understand what he’s saying. He’s going to get the others. This tribe is going to need everyone’s help to survive for the next while, and we’re all stronger together. I nod at him. “L’ren stay here. I can help.”
R’jaal moves toward us and studies K’thar. He says something to my mate and they speak in low, hushed voices. I don’t catch most of what they’re saying, but the occasional word slips in. Here. Food. Females.
Both of them glance at me, as if trying to figure me out.
“I’ll stay here,” I say again, gesturing at the beach and the huts. “I can help with Mari. Help with food. I’m strong.” I lift an arm, flex a muscle, and pat my bicep. “Strong.”
R’jaal’s lips twitch as if he’s doing his best not to laugh.
K’thar just looks proudly at me. He steps forward and cups my face in his hands. “K’thar Llo,” he murmurs, voice husky.
Oh gosh, now I’m getting all worked up and it is not the time. “All yours,” I whisper back to him. “I won’t forget. Lo belongs to K’thar.”
He looks over at R’jaal, then back at me, and then leans in and gives me the fiercest, most toe-curlingly amazing kiss I’ve ever had. It’s a possessive, branding kiss, his tongue stroking into my mouth as if he’s claiming it for his own.
I’m left breathless and panting when he breaks away. He glances over at R’jaal again, touches my cheek, and then storms towards the trees.
I feel a bit like a fire hydrant that’s just been marked as territory, and I can’t stop laughing at the thought even though I want to cry at the sight of him leaving. So soon?
But I know it’s necessary. I know he can’t leave the others for long and he can’t stay here. The only thing to do is to bring the two broken tribes together and hope we can all support each other.
Doesn’t mean I won’t miss him, though. I touch my throbbing mouth and sigh.
14
LAUREN
I tell myself that a few days without K’thar isn’t so long. After all, I survived twenty-three years without him. I can do a few more days. And the people in the beach tribe need help. Mari’s a mess and won’t leave the unconscious T’chai’s side. She keeps asking me things like, “The cootie’s supposed to make him heal faster, right? It’s going to make him better, isn’t it?”
I want to tell her yes, because that’s what I was informed of, as well. But I don’t know how the cootie deals with things like a destroyed midsection or possibly punctured organs. I don’t know how it handles sepsis or an infection or any of the gnarly things that can happen in a primitive place like this. The cootie may keep its host strong, but it can only do so much. But I only smile brightly and pat Mari on the shoulder and reassure her that he’s strong.
What else can I do?
The horned tribe—as I’ve come to think of them—is wrecked from the attack. M’tok keeps trying to walk on his knee that looks worse and worse with every hour that passes, until R’jaal sits him down and forces him to rest. S’bren—the one with the wounded arm—does what he can to help around the camp.
That leaves myself and R’jaal to take care of everyone. It’s a little awkward at first because I don’t know many of their words and he’s not as patient with me as K’thar. Through a mix of gestures and bitten-out words, he gives me tasks to do. It doesn’t matter that the twin suns are going down and I’m exhausted from walking all day. There’s water to be gathered and a fire to be built. I guess they like fire here on the beach.
By the time it’s fully dark, I’m exhausted and ready to crawl into bed. I don’t even mind when R’jaal points me into the second hut and I have to sleep across from M’tok and S’bren. It’s clear to all of them th
at I’m K’thar’s and no one’s going to touch me. I fall asleep atop a pile of leaves instantly.
The next morning, I wake up to a hiss. I rub my eyes and glance over and see that M’tok’s lancing his swollen knee. He hisses again as a river of pus dribbles down his leg, and my stomach heaves.
“You should really rest that thing,” I tell him faintly before retreating out of the hut.
I’m aching and sore and I want to sleep for a million more hours, but when I get out of the hut, R’jaal is already in the waters of the bay, casting out nets. I can’t sleep while there are people in need, so I work on stoking up the fire again. I know how to do this thanks to Liz and Harlow, at least, and I set one of the giant conch-like shells into the coals and fill it with fresh water from a nearby stream that trickles from deep within the rocks. While I’m waiting for that to boil, I grab one of the spears resting against the huts and join S’bren in gathering some of the big nuts that fall on the ground. He’s slow with only one arm, which suits me just fine because I’m not very skilled. There aren’t many, of course, and half of the ones that have fallen have rotted away. He gestures at the tall trees, indicating I should climb and get some, but I know I’m not that skilled. If K’thar were here, it’d be different.
But he’s not, so I’ll do what I can. I suck up my fear, find the shortest tree to climb, and somehow manage—slowly—to get over to the tree with the nuts and shake a few down for S’bren. By the time I get down, my knees, the insides of my thighs, and my hands and feet are scratched up and sore. Lovely.
We head back to camp and I see R’jaal dragging in a heavy net in the water, straining to pull it in. S’bren drops his armful of nuts and starts to go after him, but I put a hand on his arm and indicate that I’ll help. Of course, R’jaal doesn’t like the way I try to help him and ends up snapping and barking incomprehensible words at me as I wade in and try to help him out.
By the time we get to the shore, he looks furious, half of the fish inside the net have probably swam out my side, and I’m exhausted. It’s barely dawn.
R’jaal snatches the net from my hands and says something biting to me, and I hit my breaking point. I slap at his hands and bare my teeth at him in my best feral alien imitation. “I’m trying to help, motherfucker! Either let me help or leave me the fuck alone!”
He looks surprised at my vehemence, and then throws back his great horned head and laughs. A quick pat on my shoulder tells me that all is forgiven and then he spends the next while showing me how to grab the net and haul it so the fish don’t get away.
Between keeping water boiled for Mari so she can nurse T’chai and helping R’jaal with nets, the day flies past. I snag a meal of the occasional tree nut and a bit of fish. Most of the fish in the nets are tiny, nothing but mere mouthfuls. I notice that most of the fish is saved for myself, Mari, and T’chai. The others don’t seem to be hungry, which tells me that they’re as low on food as K’thar’s tribe.
I go to bed that night exhausted, but thinking hard. The ground gives another faint tremor, then goes still. It’s the third one that day, and everyone ignores it.
But it reminds me that we can’t just think about day-to-day survival. We need to get off this island.
We need a plan. All of us—big horns and four arms and humans—need off this island. The mainland, however distant and however cold, had plenty of game, and I know that the others were never hungry. Not like this.
So I try to think of a plan. Mari’s in no shape to do so, because T’chai’s been delirious with fever and his abdomen tight and swollen. I have to remind her to eat, so she’s definitely not planning ahead. And the others? I suspect this is the only world they know, so they’re not going to be thinking of a way off the island.
But it’s all that’s on my mind lately—escape…and K’thar.
Because I’m not leaving without him.
My affection for the big, four-armed alien is the only thing that makes sense in my world right now. I have to call it affection because I can’t be in love. It’s far too soon and my body and mind are far too influenced by my cootie at the moment. I’m trying to be practical, even though just thinking about him makes me want to giggle like a schoolgirl. I think about him all the time. I miss him an insane amount, and I watch the trees every chance I get in the hopes that I’ll see him hop down and stride toward me with those gorgeous, fluid steps of his and I’ll fling myself into his arms and he’ll pull me against him and our cooties will sing together and…
And yeah.
He needs to come back, and soon. I wonder how long it’ll take him, and I can’t stop thinking about it as I gather wood and debris to tend the firepit while R’jaal casts his nets out.
Someone does come back, though, but it’s not K’thar and the rest of his small tribe.
It’s another group. This must be the third tribe that K’thar mentioned to me back when he was telling me about his peoples. I’m surprised to see a small cluster of men walk toward our huts, and R’jaal moves protectively to my side, standing in front of me. He calls out a warning to the others, who call back to him.
These don’t have large horns. Nor do they have the strong four arms that K’thar’s group does. They’re definitely different, though. As they approach, I can see that when they talk, I catch a hint of fangs. Their fingers are tipped with fierce looking claws, and they’re the first aliens I’ve seen that have facial hair. Each one has a beard and a sprinkling of chest hair. Fascinating. So many different traits for so few people. How did this come to pass, I wonder?
The men gesture at me, and my skin prickles with awareness of just how little I’m wearing. My grass bib and my loincloth are getting pretty ragged due to days of wear, and I’ve been stuffing more leaves into the weave to try and make it last, but they’re going to fall apart pretty soon. Everyone else is naked, of course, but I feel naked with how much they’re staring at me.
R’jaal talks to them for a moment and I hear K’thar’s name pop up. Immediate disappointment crosses their faces.
All right, R’jaal is going to remain on the Christmas card list, I decide. He’s telling them that I’m mated to K’thar. Whew. The looks they send my way are a lot less interested and one bearded guy casts me a glance of pure disappointment. I hear Mari’s name, and then T’chai, and then K’thar’s name again.
The newcomers turn away and discuss quietly amongst themselves, then settle a bit farther down on the beach, at the edge of the trees. I can’t figure out what they’re doing, so I go back to working on the fire. When I look up, I see one of the newcomers wading out to help R’jaal, and another brings me a stack of firewood. The other two work at the edge of the woods and I realize that they’re making their own shelter.
I’m surprised…and a little impressed. These guys act like they don’t like each other, but when someone’s in trouble, they pitch in to help, no questions asked. It’s clear they showed up to see me and Mari, but they’re staying to help.
All right, then. The escape plan has to cover fourteen people. We all have to leave. When I get time to myself, I’ll work on a plan of some kind.
Time to myself arrives that afternoon. I’m putting fresh water into the conch shell I use for boiling when one of the bearded newcomers grabs my arm and hauls me away from the freshwater trickle. My protest dies in my throat when a shadow crosses over the encampment, and then I race hard to one of the stone huts. I huddle inside with Mari while the others camouflage into hiding.
They chase the thing off with spears and this one doesn’t even land. I’m guessing that as predators, those giant birds are very sight-based and so the camouflage keeps the aliens safe. Since Mari and I can’t camo, I have to spend the rest of the day hiding in one of the sweltering little huts with her. She sits at T’chai’s side, gently washing his wounds and stroking his brow while he sweats with fever. It’s like I’m not here.
I don’t mind that. I wouldn’t know what to say even if she paid attention to me. I’m not good with
comforting. I’m good at being stoic and practical. That part of me (the stoic part) wants to shake her and tell her to sleep, because I don’t think she has since he got wounded. But I understand how messed up she is. I’ve been worrying about K’thar non-stop since he left.
My cootie’s been rather silent, too. I hope that doesn’t mean anything awful. I don’t think I could stand it if something were to happen to the fragile bond between us. We haven’t even had a chance to explore it much.
I really, really want that chance.
So we have to leave this death trap of an island, and soon, because all these little quakes just tell me that a big one is on its way.
By the time that K’thar returns the next day, I think I have a solution, too.
15
K’THAR
I have been away from my mate for days, and never have I felt the absence of another so keenly. It makes my temper short and my mood irritable. This is not a good thing when you are traveling through the jungle with an injured tribesmate, a kit, and a nightflyer that refuses to leave his favorite perch: my head.
The weather is hot and feels more humid than before. The food is scarce, and the only nuts we find are withered. The eggs must be kept for Z’hren, so we eat nothing but a few leaves and tender shoots as we walk.
J’shel carries N’dek on his back and we keep to the ground. There are hungry kaari about, but we are safe with our camouflage. I carry all of our small clan’s goods on my back in a woven pack—stored eggs, our few nuts, and scraped leather hides. Flint tools. And I carry Z’hren, who wiggles and fusses and wants to rest. I give him an empty nut pod and let him chew on that to soothe his tears, but we are all weary and the travel is slow because we cannot move quickly. Not weighed down as we are.
Fat One screams his delight as we approach the shore and the stone huts of the clan of the Tall Horn. He flaps his wings and digs his little claws into my mane, and Z’hren giggles and reaches for him.